Movie Sets Under Siege

Wednesday, June 4th, 2008

Anyone working on a high-profile movie or TV show these days dreads seeing two words in a script: Exterior shot. Filming a hot project at an outdoor location has become a swim in a giant, incredibly public fishbowl. Of all the battlefronts in the spoiler wars, location shoots are the places where filmmakers and show creators feel the most exposed, the most overtly under siege and maybe the most powerless to plug leaks.

Even so, interlopers crashed the party wherever Crystal Skull went. Somebody in a helicopter possibly just a lucky tourist on a joyride, who was passing through airspace the Skull crew couldn’t control snapped shots of a Hawaii-based jungle sequence from above. Plot spoiling amateur videos of a motorcycle-chase scene filmed in New Haven, Conn., also showed up online, thanks to onlookers posting footage.

No matter how distant the location, it seems, those pesky snappers find a way in. A few weeks into the shoot of Iron Man, in March 2007, work was about to start at an extremely remote desert canyon spot in a gated national park near Lone Pine, Calif. More than three hours’ drive outside Los Angeles.

Barren and desolate looking, this spot would stand in for Afghanistan in a sequence where Tony Stark, played by Robert Downey Jr., gets kidnapped by terrorists. Somehow, photographers found the waiting set. They commandeered a vantage point in the hills above, and got telephoto-lens pictures of the faux terrorist encampment, including weapon containers marked Stark Industries. The images showed up on a fansite before any of the sequence had even been filmed.

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Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

A little more rugged and world-weary but still as handsome as when we were first introduced to him in The Raiders of the Lost Ark, Professor Henry “Indiana” Jones is back in Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. Now a card-carrying member of the AARP, things run a little more slowly and the over the hill jokes are a must. I was hoping that the film would capture the magic of the previous three, but alas, it did not.

indy.jpgMutt finds Indy on his way to London and tells him that Professor Oxley (John Hurt), a former classmate of Indy’s and friend of Mutt’s family, has gone missing down in South America on his search for a crystal skull. Mutt’s mom is down there and told her if she was in trouble to find Indy to help. Intrigued, Indy and Mutt venture down to Peru to find the two.

A college town chase scene ensues, followed later by a fun romp/chase through the jungles (reminiscent of the Endor speeder bike scene from Return of the Jedi). These are the elements most like the old Indy films.

While everyone, even myself, anticipated another Indiana Jones film after Last Crusade, I’m wondering now if the franchise was better left alone. Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade was, by far, my favorite film – with a far better story and a chemistry between Ford and Sean Connery that far surpasses the chemistry between Ford and LaBeouf.

It’s still a great popcorn flick, but so far Iron Man is the tops of my list of 2008 summer movies.

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The best in film this spring

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

April’s riches include Son of Rambow (opens 4 April), director Garth Jennings’ nostalgic and delightfully inventive 1980s suburbia story, centring on two schoolboys making a home video - based on Rambo - to send into BBC kids’ show Screen Test. They find a lead actor for their big DIY action flick when the French exchange group arrives.On 11 April, George Clooney takes his serious political hat off and replaces it with a cloth cap to direct and star in Leatherheads, a 1920s romcom about the beginnings of America’s pro-football league. George is the rallying coach, Ren%26eacute;e Zellweger the firebrand local news reporter determined to uncover the mystery behind the team’s latest hero.Sally Hawkins scooped best actress at the Berlin Film Festival for her winning performance at the heart of Mike Leigh’s latest character comedy, Happy-Go-Lucky (18 April). She plays a north London girl who gets wrecked with her mates at night but is a caring schoolteacher by day. Eddie Marsan is terrific as a moody cabbie.Nearly a year after having its premiere in competition at Cannes, Persepolis, Marjane Satrapi’s beautiful adaptation of her own comic strip, arrives in cinemas on 11 April. The story of a girl growing up in the bewildering early days of Ayatollah Khomeini in Tehran, it was surprisingly France’s official Oscar entry but featured only in the animated category - where it lost out to RatatouilleThe month of May brings perhaps the most surprising mainstream casting ever: Robert Downey Jr playing a superhero, albeit (supposedly) one of the most intelligent superheroes ever: Iron Man - aka genius inventor Tony Stark. Gwyneth Paltrow, Jeff Bridges and Terence Howard co-star, Samuel L Jackson has a cameo and Jon Favreau (Swingers, Elf) directs, so it could be fun (2 May).Cassandra’s Dream, Woody Allen’s third London film (after Match Point and the still unreleased Scoop), finds him on doom-laden, tragic form, as two cockney brothers (played by Scot Ewan McGregor and Dubliner Colin Farrell) enter into an immoral pact on behalf of rich uncle Tom Wilkinson. Sally Hawkins (again) steals the show, Hayley Atwell is a femme fatale. There’s a hint of late masterpiece about it. Opens 9 May.Good idea or potential disaster? Like Rocky and Rambo before him, Indiana Jones, played by 65-year-old Harrison Ford, left, comes out of retirement on 22 May in a film directed by Steven Spielberg and (partly) penned by George ‘You might be able to write this shit but you sure as hell can’t say it’ Lucas. With Shia LaBeouf, Cate Blanchett and Alan Dale joining the old gang, we’re surely entitled to ask: whose pension, exactly, is this?Sex and the city Brazenly following in the Manolo-shod footsteps of The Devil Wears Prada, the four girls from the fab TV show Sex and the City attempt a perilous journey to the big screen. Seasoned TV director Michael Patrick King is on the job while originator Candace Bushnell script-advises. Whether it’s any good is irrelevant. Its purpose? To provide more sartorial and largely inaccurate relationship advice for women the world over by tying up a few loose ends in the lives and loves of four middle-aged, oversexed New York women. When SATC (as it’s known among fans) ended in 2004, PR Samantha had a lover and cancer, curator Charlotte and lawyer Miranda were both married, and perpetually single columnist Carrie was snogging Mr Big in la belle Paris. Four different endings have been shot in a bid to prevent Big and Carrie’s marital showdown being leaked in advance. The film looks set to break some box-office records. Expect to queue.Sex and the City: The Movie opens on 29 May

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The best in the arts this spring

Sunday, March 16th, 2008

April’s riches include Son of Rambow (opens 4 April), director Garth Jennings’ nostalgic and delightfully inventive 1980s suburbia story, centring on two schoolboys making a home video - based on Rambo - to send into BBC kids’ show Screen Test. They find a lead actor for their big DIY action flick when the French exchange group arrives.On 11 April, George Clooney takes his serious political hat off and replaces it with a cloth cap to direct and star in Leatherheads, a 1920s romcom about the beginnings of America’s pro-football league. George is the rallying coach, Ren%26eacute;e Zellweger the firebrand local news reporter determined to uncover the mystery behind the team’s latest hero.Sally Hawkins scooped best actress at the Berlin Film Festival for her winning performance at the heart of Mike Leigh’s latest character comedy, Happy-Go-Lucky (18 April). She plays a north London girl who gets wrecked with her mates at night but is a caring schoolteacher by day. Eddie Marsan is terrific as a moody cabbie.Nearly a year after having its premiere in competition at Cannes, Persepolis, Marjane Satrapi’s beautiful adaptation of her own comic strip, arrives in cinemas on 11 April. The story of a girl growing up in the bewildering early days of Ayatollah Khomeini in Tehran, it was surprisingly France’s official Oscar entry but featured only in the animated category - where it lost out to RatatouilleThe month of May brings perhaps the most surprising mainstream casting ever: Robert Downey Jr playing a superhero, albeit (supposedly) one of the most intelligent superheroes ever: Iron Man - aka genius inventor Tony Stark. Gwyneth Paltrow, Jeff Bridges and Terence Howard co-star, Samuel L Jackson has a cameo and Jon Favreau (Swingers, Elf) directs, so it could be fun (2 May).Cassandra’s Dream, Woody Allen’s third London film (after Match Point and the still unreleased Scoop), finds him on doom-laden, tragic form, as two cockney brothers (played by Scot Ewan McGregor and Dubliner Colin Farrell) enter into an immoral pact on behalf of rich uncle Tom Wilkinson. Sally Hawkins (again) steals the show, Hayley Atwell is a femme fatale. There’s a hint of late masterpiece about it. Opens 9 May.Good idea or potential disaster? Like Rocky and Rambo before him, Indiana Jones, played by 65-year-old Harrison Ford, left, comes out of retirement on 22 May in a film directed by Steven Spielberg and (partly) penned by George ‘You might be able to write this shit but you sure as hell can’t say it’ Lucas. With Shia LaBeouf, Cate Blanchett and Alan Dale joining the old gang, we’re surely entitled to ask: whose pension, exactly, is this?Sex and the city Brazenly following in the Manolo-shod footsteps of The Devil Wears Prada, the four girls from the fab TV show Sex and the City attempt a perilous journey to the big screen. Seasoned TV director Michael Patrick King is on the job while originator Candace Bushnell script-advises. Whether it’s any good is irrelevant. Its purpose? To provide more sartorial and largely inaccurate relationship advice for women the world over by tying up a few loose ends in the lives and loves of four middle-aged, oversexed New York women. When SATC (as it’s known among fans) ended in 2004, PR Samantha had a lover and cancer, curator Charlotte and lawyer Miranda were both married, and perpetually single columnist Carrie was snogging Mr Big in la belle Paris.

Four different endings have been shot in a bid to prevent Big and Carrie’s marital showdown being leaked in advance. The film looks set to break some box-office records. Expect to queue.Sex and the City: The Movie opens on 29 May Art Tate Liverpool plays host to Britain’s biggest-ever Klimt exhibitionGustav Klimt How much sensuality can you take? Klimt offers the greatest overload in the history of art. The rich mix is his forte: nudes kissing, lounging, yearning, coupling against a world of gold leaf and jewel-bright colours, a hint of spirituality here balanced by luxurious sexuality there. He is the master of consumption, material and sensual, and by now the very epitome of decadent fin-de-siecle Vienna. But he only caught on worldwide in the Sixties and this belated show is the first comprehensive survey ever staged in Britain. From Salome to The Golden Knight, paintings from all stages of Klimt’s life will be on display: sink into proto-psychedelic opulence. Gustav Klimt, Tate Liverpool, 30 %26#8239;May-31 AugustAlso arriving in Liverpool this spring are some of the biggest names in modern painting: Edouard Manet, Claude Monet, Vincent van Gogh, Camille Pissarro and Edward Hopper in a show at the Walker Art Gallery (18 April-10 August) devoted to Art in the Age of Steam. There will be trains, certainly - think of Hopper’s locomotives disappearing across the prairie - but the focus is on the art of industrial cities: Paris, New York, London, from the birth of the railways until the 1960s.You might think Alberto Giacometti oversold, but in fact there hasn’t been a British show in decades. This one, at the beautiful gallery of Compton Verney in Warwickshire (until 1 June) looks at the sudden development of his thin men in the months following the armistice in 1945. Expect many classics, plus rare portraits, among others, of Jean Genet.Tate Modern’s big spring show is a colossal survey of 20th-century portraiture - Street and Studio: An Urban History of Photography (22 May-31 August) - highly posed indoors, casually snapped on the streets outside. All the master- and mistress- photographers of the century will be represented, from Cartier-Bresson, Arbus and Beaton to Mapplethorpe, Tillmans and Sherman. It all adds up to one in the eye for the NPG.And for anyone more interested in places than people, Modern Art Oxford is celebrating the magical landscapes of the father of American photography, Ansel Adams (2 April-1 June). From the soaring monoliths of Yosemite by moonlight to the ice lakes of Alaska, 70 images of the sublime will represent a career of 50 years.Theatre Tomorrow is another day - and Vanessa Redgrave is Joan DidionGone with the Wind Gone With the Wind, as a musical, has everything going for it. And unless the wind is coming in from the wrong direction, Trevor Nunn’s new adaptation (opening 22 April, New London Theatre) could blow audiences off their feet. Darius Danesh (of Pop Idol) plays Rhett Butler and Jill Paice (who starred in The Woman in White) is Scarlett O’Hara. A Glaswegian Rhett might give you pause for thought but Danesh looks the part (suave ‘n’ dark) and his voice should hit the spot. The ingredients of this tempestuous epic, set in 1860s Atlanta Georgia, never fail: it’s a romantic rollercoaster, America’s sentimental answer to War and Peace. The 1936 novel won its author, Margaret Mitchell, the Pulitzer prize, the movie broke box-office records and this show, with Gareth Valentine at the musical helm, looks like a ticket worth securing before the show goes into preview on 4 April.Yasmina Reza, who wrote Art, has a new play, God of Carnage, on at the Gielgud (opens 24 March). It’s about two couples who meet to discuss a scrap between their children. The warring quartet is high-profile: Ralph Fiennes, Tamsin Greig, Janet McTeer and Ken Stott. It will be fascinating to watch them slug it out. Meanwhile, Howard Brenton also has a new play, Never So Good, coming to the National. It takes in the Suez crisis, adultery and the end of empire. Jeremy Irons plays Harold Macmillan and the cast also includes Anna Carteret and Anna Chancellor (Lyttleton, 26 March-24 May).In April, architecturally inspired company dreamthinkspeak perform a work in the hidden areas of Liverpool’s Anglican Cathedral. One Step Forward, One Step Back draws on Dante’s Paradiso and the city’s landscape, using film, installation, models and live performance (7 April-10 May). A different kind of exploration is involved in poet Tony Harrison’s new play, Fram. It’s about the Norwegian voyager Fridtjof Nansen, who travelled in the Arctic during the 1890s. It promises to bring ice floes, bear-fur sleeping bags and the ghosts of pioneers to the Olivier. Jasper Britton is to play Nansen and Bob Crowley directs (with help from Harrison himself). Previews from 17 April; ends 22 May. And there is another not-to-be-missed chance to catch the National Theatre of Scotland’s tremendous Black Watch, by Gregory Burke, based on interviews with soldiers who served in Iraq. This is an extraordinary piece about what it takes to be part of the ‘War on Terror’. The show comes to England for the first time as part of a UK-wide tour which culminates at the Barbican (20 June-26 July).For those who require musical relief, there is a treat in store. The team behind Les Mis%26eacute;rables (Michel Legrand, Alain Boublil, Claude-Michel Sch%26ouml;nberg and Herbert Kretzmer) open the highly anticipated Marguerite, based on La Dame aux Cam%26eacute;lias, but set in occupied Paris. It stars Ruthie Henshall and Julian Ovenden and is the crowd-pleasing last production in Jonathan Kent’s season at the Theatre Royal Haymarket.But it is probably the National’s The Year of Magical Thinking that will (after Gone With the Wind) be the hottest ticket of the season. Vanessa Redgrave reprises her solo Broadway success in Joan Didion’s adaptation of her bestselling memoir, describing her life after the sudden death of John Gregory Dunne, her husband of 40 years. David Hare directs. At the Lyttelton (25 April-20 May).Classical From monsters to Punch, it spells boomtime for BirtwistleLost Highway David Lynch’s 1997 psychological thriller Lost Highway, his exploration of dislocation and desire via the troubled mind of jazz musician Fred Madison, might seem an unlikely candidate for conversion to opera. In its passionate mission to win new audiences for contemporary music-theatre, however, English National Opera has daringly done just that in an imaginative collaboration with the Young Vic designed to become an annual event. ‘A seething combination of sound and image’ is promised as off-Broadway director Diane Paulus adds state-of-the-art extra dimensions such as video footage and surround-sound to 40-year-old Austrian composer Olga Neuwirth’s score.Lost Highway, Young Vic, London SE1, 4-11 AprilA strong season for contemporary music continues in Birmingham on 14 April, when Oliver Knussen conducts the Birmingham Contemporary Music Group in Good Dream She Has, a new setting of texts from Milton’s Paradise Lost by British composer Luke Bedford (CBSO Centre, Birmingham). The following evening sees the Royal Opera stage the world premiere of Harrison Birtwistle’s The Minotaur. Starring John Tomlinson as a monster in search of his identity, it is conducted by Antonio Pappano (Covent Garden, 15 April-3 May).Four days later, in another joint venture with the Young Vic, ENO mounts a new production of Birtwistle’s controversial early work, Punch and Judy, tantalisingly billed as ‘not suitable for under-16s’. This will be the second production of this potent piece in a month, with Music Theatre Wales launching its version at the Linbury Studio Theatre tomorrow.English National Opera returns to more traditional fare with Lehar’s The Merry Widow, in a new staging by veteran John Copley (after the withdrawal of the Southbank’s Jude Kelly), with a cast led by Amanda Roocroft, Alfie Boe and Roy Hudd (Coliseum, London WC2, 26 April-30 May). Glyndebourne’s season opens on 18 May with hot young soprano Danielle de Niese, last year’s show-stealing Cleopatra, as Monteverdi’s version of Nero’s unfaithful empress in L’incoronazione di Poppea, directed by contentious Canadian Robert Carsen (18 May-4 July).Pop Back to basics with minimalist boy-girl duoThe Ting Tings Pop music is far too important to be left to anodyne pop bands. Step forward the Ting Tings, a sunny boy-girl duo from the dour rehearsal spaces of Salford, Greater Manchester. He: Jules De Martino, drums. She: Katie White, sings and plays rudimentary guitar. Some machines flesh out the rest. There’s not much to them and that’s the beauty of it. The Ting Tings’ music is a sassy playground taunt aimed at the dancefloor. Their opening salvo, last year’s infectious demo of ‘That’s Not My Name’, announced an outfit in thrall to the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and Toni Basil, both righteous and breezy. Their debut album, We Started Nothing, is due out on 19 May. Spring has officially sprung.With a loud, fast new album, Accelerate, REM have just announced summer festival and stadium dates. A gig at the Royal Albert Hall, London, on 24 March, kicks off a season of high-octane action.Ten years since their last (live) album, prodigal heroes Portishead are back with a glowering new one, Third, and a generous European tour (9-17 April). It really has been worth the wait.Last year’s Volta album was Bj%26ouml;rk’s most powerful in years. Her 18-month worldwide jaunt comes to Manchester Apollo on 11 April, bringing with it the usual carnival of unbridled creativity, an all-female brass section and a thumping great urgency (nationwide tour, until 4 May).In the second half of April, Indigo2, London, hosts a brainstorm of eclectic gigs from classy promoters Eat Your Own Ears. Four Tet and Sunburned Hand of the Man (24th), Wu-Tang Clan’s RZA playing as Bobby Digital (28th) and dance label Kompakt celebrating their 15th year (27th) are among the thrills in store.’Progressive patriot’ Billy Bragg is reclaiming St George’s Day from right-wingers. He’s headlining Still Looking for a New England, an alternative celebration of words and music at the Barbican Hall, London, on 23 April.From George to Gilbert: Brazilian guitar maestro Gilberto Gil brings his politically charged songs to the Barbican, London, on 31 March for a welcome one-off solo show.Led Zeppelin fans should indulge in the most gorgeous music that Robert Plant has made in ages, as he merges his voice with bluegrass singer Alison Krauss on a series of elegant covers. Birmingham, Manchester and Cardiff are blessed from 5-8 May, with a final show at Wembley Arena on 22 May.All Tomorrow’s Parties returns to its spiritual home at Camber Sands, East Sussex, on 9-11 May. Webziners Pitchfork curate and Hot Chip, the Hold Steady and Vampire Weekend all play. A second weekend, at Butlins Minehead (16-18 May) is curated by Explosions in the SkyFulfilling boyhood dreams, Kaiser Chiefs have hired their beloved Leeds United’s ground, Elland Road, for a one-day megagig on 24 May. Supports include Kate Nash and the Enemy; more will be announced.Troubled diva Liza Minnelli curtailed her tour last December, after she collapsed at the end of a gig in Gothenburg, Sweden. As befits a showbiz superstar, the show carries on in May. Minnelli plays three nights at the Coliseum, London (from 25 May), before heading across the UK.Finally, Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band bring their Magic tour to Arsenal’s Emirates Stadium (30-31 May); Manchester (28) and Cardiff (14 June) are the other pitstops.New albums are coming from Mariah Carey (14 April) and Madonna (28 April), but look out for the Last Shadow Puppets, Arctic Monkeys frontman Alex Turner’s side project (21 April), as well as new music from Spiritualized (19 May).Dance Buddhist monks meet Bruce Lee, plus an electric new work from Wayne McGregorSutra In 2005, Flemish-Moroccan choreographer Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui created the acclaimed Zero Degrees with dancer-choreographer Akram Khan and sculptor Antony Gormley. His new work, Sutra, which features 17 Buddhist warrior-monks from the Shaolin temple in China, reunites him with Gormley, who has constructed an environment for the piece. Both men are fascinated by Buddhism and its expression through kung fu, and their ideas are drawn together to a new score by Szymon Brzoska. Cherkaoui also performs Myth at the same venue, 16-17 May.Sutra, Sadler’s Wells, London EC1, 27-31 MaySadler’s Wells also has the pick of April’s dance events, starting with a season by the highly regarded Nederlands Dans Theater. With works by Jiri Kylian and Leon/Lightfoot, you can count on jaw-dropping production values and thoroughbred dance action. Whether the result adds up to numinous dance-theatre or pretentious spectacle is for you to decide (2-5 April). The following week, Wayne McGregor premieres Entity, a major new piece for Random Dance, set to music by Bj%26ouml;rk collaborator Nico Muhly and electronic master Jon Hopkins. For fans of visceral new dance, this will be one of the season’s hottest tickets.Something chillier on the other side of the Thames, meanwhile, as Maresa von Stockert presents her new piece, Glacier, which will be danced in a world of melting ice and falling snow (Queen Elizabeth Hall, 10, 11 April). In May, hoping to excise memories of its catastrophic 2006 visit orchestrated by Valery Gergiev, St Petersburg’s Kirov Ballet returns to these shores with a shining parcel of classics. Three programmes feature Balanchine’s Jewels, Don Quixote, and a gala night (13-17 May, Lowry, Manchester, 20-24 May Hippodrome, Birmingham).Finally, a promising dance programme at this year’s Brighton Festival includes Ballet National de Marseille’s UK premiere of Metamorphoses (Concert Hall, 3-4 May), and a triple-bill of aerial dance-theatre from Lindsey Butcher’s Gravity and Levity (Corn Exchange, 12-14 May; also touring).TV Alan Sugar and other treatsGossip Girl Blair and Serena used to be BFFs (Best Friends Forever), but then Serena left Manhattan under mysterious circumstances. Now she’s back in New York and hoping to start over, but there’s just one problem: with Blair as your frenemy there’s nowhere to hide. Welcome to Gossip Girl, the teen drama to end all teen dramas and the guiltiest pleasure of the season. Based on the bestselling novels, the funny, frivolous Gossip Girl is a Devil Wears Prada for the prep-school set, with eye candy in the shape of the three male leads, a love story from across the tracks and some of the wittiest putdowns around. Yes, it might be frivolous, but as the anonymous Gossip Girl herself says: ‘You know you love me.’ You may not want to, but in the end you will.Gossip Girl starts 27 March, 9pm, ITV2 The Apprentice is back for a fourth series (BBC1, 26 March) with 16 new egos lining up to feel the force of Sir Alan’s boardroom bark. The usual heady mix of arrogance, incompetence and desperation is assured, but can anyone match the panto presence of Katie Hopkins?Perking things up after the winter glut of costume dramas, Alexander McCall Smith’s The No 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency is a gentle Easter treat for all the family. The Anthony Minghella-Richard Curtis screenplay has soul singer Jill Scott in the lead and comes complete with meerkats, stunning Botswanan landscape and a hilarious cameo from David Oyelowo. (BBC1, Easter Sunday).US hit Dirty Sexy Money (C4, 21 March) promises lots of frothy, flippant fun. A smart send-up of celebrity and the super-rich, it stars Peter Krause (Six Feet Under) as a lawyer with values persuaded by property magnate Tripp Darling (Donald Sutherland) to represent his repulsive family.Julie Walters battles against BBC director-general Hugh Carleton Greene (Hugh Bonneville) in Filth: The Mary Whitehouse Story as the moral crusader holding back a tide of sin and depravity in Britain (BBC2).Throughout spring, BBC4 winds back 700 years to uncover religion, monarchy, architecture and the arts in a special Medieval Season. Highlights include Stephen Fry on the Gutenberg press (April), and Simon Russell Beale examining sacred music (21 March).All our American favourites are back, with the fourth season of Desperate Housewives (C4, 26 March) leading the pack, plus House and Grey’s Anatomy (both five, 20 March), Heroes (BBC2, April), Brothers and Sisters (E4, April) and My Name is Earl (C4, 20 March). Finally, the great British stalwart that is Doctor Who, returns in April (BBC1).

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Quiet man at the centre of Barcelona’s revival

Saturday, March 1st, 2008

As the bus trundled down the Avenida Diagonal, one man was absent from the top deck: Frank Rijkaard. While his players celebrated, he sat in the gloom below, silently puffing on a cigarette. On the way back from clinching the title at Valencia, Bar%26ccedil;a’s president, Joan Laporta, had raised the Dutchman’s arm aloft, like a boxer, as they arrived in the departure lounge. The coach simply looked down, pulled his hand free and hurried through passport control.It was typical Rijkaard. Since taking over in 2003, he has stood out by not standing out at all, the quiet man at the centre of Barcelona’s revival. If Roman Abramovich wants a low-profile coach, Rijkaard slips under the radar entirely. What made Rijkaard’s spats with Jose Mourinho so notable was not the way he reacted but that he reacted at all.One of Rijkaard’s charges in the Holland team defines him in three words: cool under pressure. “Frank speaks so quietly you have to strain to hear him,” says Ronaldinho. “The best thing about the mister,” adds Puyol, “is that he is very calm.” Rijkaard admits his first task on taking over was to make the players feel “protected and relaxed”.At Barcelona that is easier said than done. It is not just about managing the team but managing the whole entourage. “The key to our success is the calmness Rijkaard transmits to everyone,” says Laporta. Privately, those close to Rijkaard say the pressure has taken its toll, though rarely has it surfaced publicly. He is widely liked, never seeks conflict Mourinho-style and rarely responds to barbed questions or even the most bitter of accusations. Rijkaard could hardly be more different from the former coach Louis van Gaal. But it worked. Although only the third choice, behind Guus Hiddink and Ronald Koeman, Rijkaard joined a club that had not won the league in five years and lurched from crisis to crisis. At Christmas 2003 Bar%26ccedil;a were 12th, 18 points behind Real Madrid and humiliated 5-0 at M%26aacute;laga.But Rijkaard did not panic and neither did the club. Nine successive wins began a run in which they overhauled Real to finish second to Valencia. The following season, with Eto’o and Deco joining, they won the title, repeated the success the following year and added the European Cup by beating Arsenal in Paris.It was all done with wonderful football. Schooled at Ajax, and a disciple of Total Football, Rijkaard is adamant about “keeping the game open”. He adopted a 4-3-3 formation that allowed a catalogue of creative stars to complement each other. Winning games and winning over people, here was the footballing nirvana that Roman Abramovich believed he could not achieve with Mourinho.”He gives us freedom and doesn’t always pressure us,” said Puyol. But what was meant as a compliment soon became a criticism. Rijkaard’s relaxed nature came to be judged as passivity. Critics who lauded his paternalism in victory attacked his weakness in defeat. Rijkaard had, after all, allowed Ronaldinho to miss more than half of last season’s training yet still refused to drop him, even as he became clearly overweight. Rijkaard’s sessions, though, were dismissed as short, lacking intensity, and with no tactical work at all.With Henk Ten Cate moving to Chelsea, Rijkaard appeared to have lost the hard man he needed to make his routine succeed. Some urged Rijkaard to get tough and he took some measures, including dropping Ronaldinho for the first time ever last month, but adopting a harder attitude would not wash and he was not false enough to try it. It was not that he made wrong decisions; he made no decisions at all. The balancing act did not work either. Rijkaard’s ability to maintain harmony blew up in his face when Eto’o launched a furious harangue on Ronaldinho and referred to the coach as a “bad person”. Rijkaard showed no reaction.Packed with talent and blessed with a huge lead, Bar%26ccedil;a contrived to throw away last year’s league title. Divided, lacking tactical rigour or fitness, they appeared to have gone down the gal%26aacute;ctico route. This year’s poor start has only reinforced that belief. Suddenly the call is for another kind of coach, an iron man in the Mourinho fashion; just as Mourinho’s former employers are looking for a coach cut from a different cloth.Rijkaard’s recordAs a player1980 Made senior debut aged 17 for Ajax under Leo Beenhakker1982 Won championship with Ajax, the first of three titles in his first spell at the club1987 Fell out with Johan Cruyff, eventually going out on loan to Real Zaragoza before moving to Milan where he achieved legendary status1988 Arrigo Sacchi converted him from central defender to world-class midfielder in a side with Marco van Basten and Ruud Gullit who won the European Cup twice and Serie A title twice. As an international won Euro 88 and a semi-finalist in 1992As a manager2000 Despite inexperience as a manager, he guided Holland to the Euro 2000 semi-finals2003 After a difficult start he turned around Barcelona’s fortunes. They finished runners-up in first season before winning La Liga twice2006 Won Champions League, beating Arsenal in the final

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Indy, Bond, Trek, Batman: Movies coming in 2008

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

Thanks to the long lead time for big-screen productions, the
2008 film schedule will go on largely uninterrupted despite the
writers strike.
With a solid range of prospects, the 2008 lineup offers plenty
of intriguing questions.
Can Harrison Ford’s Indiana Jones still throw a punch? Is Harry
Potter looking ahead to the senior prom now that he’s in his
next-to-last year at Hogwarts? Will Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto
live long and prosper as the Trek world’s new Kirk and Spock?
And just what have perpetually lovelorn writer Carrie Bradshaw
and her gal pals been up to since Sex and the City went
off the air in 2004?
Sarah Jessica Parker, who reprises the role in New Line Cinema’s
upcoming big-screen adaptation of Sex and the City, is not
at liberty to say.
“I was given a pill by New Line, and it erased my short-term
memory. They took away my script,” said Parker, who rejoins
castmates Kim Cattrall, Kristin Davis and Cynthia Nixon.
Coyness over plot points is an epidemic this time of year as
stars and filmmakers look ahead to their big releases. In the age
of internet spoilers, everyone wants to keep as much as they can
secret so fans don’t go into the theatre already quoting the
script.
Continuing the story of Bruce Wayne after Batman
Begins, director Christopher Nolan bluntly said “you’ll need
to see the movie” if you want to know what Christian Bale’s
tragedy-torn superhero is up to.
Nolan does offer an answer to the obvious question: Why doesn’t
the latest Batman movie have the word “Batman” in the title?
“In doing a continuation of the story, we didn’t want to give
the impression that it’s just going to be the standard-issue
sequel,” Nolan said of The Dark Knight, due out the US
this northern summer from Warner Bros. “We wanted this to be the
definitive take on who the Dark Knight is and what that represents
and what the meaning of that appellation is.”
The sequel does make good on the tease at the end of Batman
Begins, which set up Bale’s first encounter with his ultimate
nemesis. Heath Ledger plays the Joker, and Nolan promised an
utterly different take from Jack Nicholson’s in 1989’s
Batman.
“The corrupted clown face is built into the icon of the Joker,
but we gave a Francis Bacon spin to it. This corruption, this decay
in the texture of the look itself. It’s grubby. You can almost
imagine what he smells like,” Nolan said.
Fan imaginations have run wild over Paramount’s Indiana
Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, the first film
about Ford’s archaeologist-adventurer in 19 years.
Set in 1957, Crystal Skull pits Indy against the Soviets, whose
number includes Cate Blanchett, Ford confirmed. Beyond that, Ford’s
not leaking plot details, including whether new co-star Shia
LaBeouf is Indy’s son or whether Ford shares any romantic moments
with Blanchett.
“They remain true to their characters. There’s a certain tension
between the two, but not a sexual energy,” Ford said cryptically of
his and Blanchett’s characters.
Ford also kept quiet on how Indy reunites with Karen Allen’s
character.
“It’s great to have Karen back,” Ford said. “I can’t really tell
you much, though. It’s a little too early to be saying much more
than what’s already been said, and I don’t want to be the one to
unwrap the Christmas present.”
While it remains a mystery if Ford gets to play LaBeouf’s dad in
the new movie, Indy himself is not reunited with his own father.
Ford was disappointed that Sean Connery, who played Henry Jones Sr
in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, decided not to reprise the
role.
The 65-year-old Ford had a joke worthy of Indy about that: “As I
told Sean, I’m getting old enough to play my own father, so we
don’t need him, anymore.”
Along with Indy, Batman and Carrie, Hollywood offers plenty of
other familiar names this year.
TV’s favourite alien hunters, Mulder and Scully, return for 20th
Century Fox’s as-yet-untitled second X-Files movie, with
David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson reunited with series creator
Chris Carter, who’s directing.
C S Lewis’ sibling heroes are back in Disney’s The
Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian, with The Lion, the
Witch and the Wardrobe director Andrew Adamson running the
show again and Liam Neeson reprising the voice of talking lion
Aslan.
Daniel Craig has his second outing as 007 in Sony’s
still-untitled James Bond adventure, with Judi Dench returning as
spymaster M and Jeffrey Wright reprising his role as CIA colleague
Felix Leiter.
Agent Maxwell Smart, who started as a Bond spoof on 1960s TV,
comes to the big-screen in the Warner Bros action comedy Get
Smart, with Steve Carell in the title role, Dwayne Johnson as
a superstar operative and Anne Hathaway as Agent 99.
Minus Rachel Weisz, his co-star in the first two Mummy movies,
Brendan Fraser has another go at fighting a resurrected dead guy,
this time an ancient Chinese ruler (Jet Li), in The Mummy: Tomb
of the Dragon Emperor. Frasier also stars in Journey, a 3-D
take on Jules Verne’s sci-fi classic Journey to the Centre of
the Earth.
And Star Trek revisits its roots, with Pine taking over
William Shatner’s role as bold Enterprise Capt James Kirk and
Quinto stepping in as Leonard Nimoy’s Vulcan science officer Spock.
The Paramount film is directed by Lost creator J J
Abrams.
Along with such action and visual-effects spectacles come an
intriguing range of dramatic stories.
Brad Pitt reunites with Babel co-star Blanchett for
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, based on an F Scott
Fitzgerald story about a man who ages backward from old age toward
infancy.
Director Baz Luhrmann reteams with Moulin Rouge star
Nicole Kidman for Australia, co-starring Hugh Jackman in a
tale of a cattle drive down under amid a bombing by Japanese forces
during World War II.
In another World War II saga, Spike Lee directs Miracle at
St Anna, the story of four Americans (Derek Luke, Michael
Ealy, Laz Alonso and Omar Benson Miller) who are part of an
all-black division fighting in Italy at a time when segregation
remained the standard.
“You had the dilemma of these soldiers who really had to battle
on two fronts. They were fighting for their country in a foreign
land, and at the same time, in many parts of the United States,
they were still considered second-class citizens,” Lee said. “This
offers a really rich character study of Negro soldiers going
through that conflict. They want to fight for their country, but
they have to ask: Is this really worth it when I could go back to
Alabama and be lynched?”
Other big 2008 titles: Starship Dave, with Eddie Murphy
playing an entire space craft in a sci-fi comedy about a group of
tiny aliens seeking haven on Earth inside a vessel disguised as a
human; Wall-E, the latest from the animation masters at
Pixar (The Incredibles, Ratatouille), about a
robot left to tend the planet after humanity has left; Speed Racer,
starring Emile Hirsch in a live-action update of the TV cartoon
show, directed by Larry and Andy Wachowski, creators of The
Matrix flicks; The Incredible Hulk, with Edward
Norton the latest incarnation of the scientist with a really angry
alter ego; Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince,
featuring Daniel Radcliffe and pals in the second-to-last adventure
of the boy wizard; Leatherheads, a 1920s football comedy
directed by and starring George Clooney alongside Renee Zellweger
and John Krasinski; and The Spiderwick Chronicles, a
fantasy based on the children’s books about a mum (Mary-Louise
Parker) and her kids who move into the magical house owned by an
eccentric relation.
Parker was not into fantasy as a child, but Spiderwick
Chronicles allowed her to branch out into the family
genre.
“I did read Narnia, but I was more of a Little
House on the Prairie person. I’m not really a fan of things
flying around, but I always wanted to do a children’s movie, and
this seemed like sort of an atypical fantasy-type thing,” Parker
said. “The children, they weren’t archetypes. They were very unique
and they had some complexity to them. And the mother did, too. She
wasn’t just the perfect mother who was always struggling. She loses
her temper.”
Also coming this year: He’s Just Not That Into You, a
romantic comedy that casts Ben Affleck alongside two Jennifers -
Jennifer Aniston and Jennifer Connelly, along with Scarlett
Johansson and Drew Barrymore; Mamma Mia!, featuring Meryl
Streep, Pierce Brosnan and the songs of ABBA in an adaptation of
the stage musical; You Don’t Mess With the Zohan, a comedy
with Adam Sandler as an Israeli commando who fakes his death so he
can become a New York City hairdresser; Step Brothers,
with Will Ferrell and John C Reilly as middle-aged slackers who
suddenly become kin by marriage; Dr Seuss’ Horton Hears a
Who, an animated version of the children’s classic featuring
the voices of Jim Carrey and Steve Carell; Iron Man, with
Robert Downey Jr and Gwyneth Paltrow in a big-screen version of the
comic-book hero; and Madagascar: The Crate Escape, an
animated sequel reteaming the voice cast of Ben Stiller, Chris
Rock, David Schwimmer and Jada Pinkett Smith as zoo animals in the
wild.
Pinkett Smith’s husband, Will Smith, returns to the big
box-office date he has owned in the past, starring with Charlize
Theron in the Fourth of July release Hancock, the story of
an alcoholic superhero that he promises will range from crazy
comedy to sober drama to visual spectacle.
AP

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Related posts

Indy, Bond, Trek, Batman: Movies coming in 2008

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

Thanks to the long lead time for big-screen productions, the
2008 film schedule will go on largely uninterrupted despite the
writers strike.
With a solid range of prospects, the 2008 lineup offers plenty
of intriguing questions.
Can Harrison Ford’s Indiana Jones still throw a punch? Is Harry
Potter looking ahead to the senior prom now that he’s in his
next-to-last year at Hogwarts? Will Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto
live long and prosper as the Trek world’s new Kirk and Spock?
And just what have perpetually lovelorn writer Carrie Bradshaw
and her gal pals been up to since Sex and the City went
off the air in 2004?
Sarah Jessica Parker, who reprises the role in New Line Cinema’s
upcoming big-screen adaptation of Sex and the City, is not
at liberty to say.
“I was given a pill by New Line, and it erased my short-term
memory. They took away my script,” said Parker, who rejoins
castmates Kim Cattrall, Kristin Davis and Cynthia Nixon.
Coyness over plot points is an epidemic this time of year as
stars and filmmakers look ahead to their big releases. In the age
of internet spoilers, everyone wants to keep as much as they can
secret so fans don’t go into the theatre already quoting the
script.
Continuing the story of Bruce Wayne after Batman
Begins, director Christopher Nolan bluntly said “you’ll need
to see the movie” if you want to know what Christian Bale’s
tragedy-torn superhero is up to.
Nolan does offer an answer to the obvious question: Why doesn’t
the latest Batman movie have the word “Batman” in the title?
“In doing a continuation of the story, we didn’t want to give
the impression that it’s just going to be the standard-issue
sequel,” Nolan said of The Dark Knight, due out the US
this northern summer from Warner Bros. “We wanted this to be the
definitive take on who the Dark Knight is and what that represents
and what the meaning of that appellation is.”
The sequel does make good on the tease at the end of Batman
Begins, which set up Bale’s first encounter with his ultimate
nemesis. Heath Ledger plays the Joker, and Nolan promised an
utterly different take from Jack Nicholson’s in 1989’s
Batman.
“The corrupted clown face is built into the icon of the Joker,
but we gave a Francis Bacon spin to it. This corruption, this decay
in the texture of the look itself. It’s grubby. You can almost
imagine what he smells like,” Nolan said.
Fan imaginations have run wild over Paramount’s Indiana
Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, the first film
about Ford’s archaeologist-adventurer in 19 years.
Set in 1957, Crystal Skull pits Indy against the Soviets, whose
number includes Cate Blanchett, Ford confirmed. Beyond that, Ford’s
not leaking plot details, including whether new co-star Shia
LaBeouf is Indy’s son or whether Ford shares any romantic moments
with Blanchett.
“They remain true to their characters. There’s a certain tension
between the two, but not a sexual energy,” Ford said cryptically of
his and Blanchett’s characters.
Ford also kept quiet on how Indy reunites with Karen Allen’s
character.
“It’s great to have Karen back,” Ford said. “I can’t really tell
you much, though. It’s a little too early to be saying much more
than what’s already been said, and I don’t want to be the one to
unwrap the Christmas present.”
While it remains a mystery if Ford gets to play LaBeouf’s dad in
the new movie, Indy himself is not reunited with his own father.
Ford was disappointed that Sean Connery, who played Henry Jones Sr
in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, decided not to reprise the
role.
The 65-year-old Ford had a joke worthy of Indy about that: “As I
told Sean, I’m getting old enough to play my own father, so we
don’t need him, anymore.”
Along with Indy, Batman and Carrie, Hollywood offers plenty of
other familiar names this year.
TV’s favourite alien hunters, Mulder and Scully, return for 20th
Century Fox’s as-yet-untitled second X-Files movie, with
David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson reunited with series creator
Chris Carter, who’s directing.
C S Lewis’ sibling heroes are back in Disney’s The
Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian, with The Lion, the
Witch and the Wardrobe director Andrew Adamson running the
show again and Liam Neeson reprising the voice of talking lion
Aslan.
Daniel Craig has his second outing as 007 in Sony’s
still-untitled James Bond adventure, with Judi Dench returning as
spymaster M and Jeffrey Wright reprising his role as CIA colleague
Felix Leiter.
Agent Maxwell Smart, who started as a Bond spoof on 1960s TV,
comes to the big-screen in the Warner Bros action comedy Get
Smart, with Steve Carell in the title role, Dwayne Johnson as
a superstar operative and Anne Hathaway as Agent 99.
Minus Rachel Weisz, his co-star in the first two Mummy movies,
Brendan Fraser has another go at fighting a resurrected dead guy,
this time an ancient Chinese ruler (Jet Li), in The Mummy: Tomb
of the Dragon Emperor. Frasier also stars in Journey, a 3-D
take on Jules Verne’s sci-fi classic Journey to the Centre of
the Earth.
And Star Trek revisits its roots, with Pine taking over
William Shatner’s role as bold Enterprise Capt James Kirk and
Quinto stepping in as Leonard Nimoy’s Vulcan science officer Spock.
The Paramount film is directed by Lost creator J J
Abrams.
Along with such action and visual-effects spectacles come an
intriguing range of dramatic stories.
Brad Pitt reunites with Babel co-star Blanchett for
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, based on an F Scott
Fitzgerald story about a man who ages backward from old age toward
infancy.
Director Baz Luhrmann reteams with Moulin Rouge star
Nicole Kidman for Australia, co-starring Hugh Jackman in a
tale of a cattle drive down under amid a bombing by Japanese forces
during World War II.
In another World War II saga, Spike Lee directs Miracle at
St Anna, the story of four Americans (Derek Luke, Michael
Ealy, Laz Alonso and Omar Benson Miller) who are part of an
all-black division fighting in Italy at a time when segregation
remained the standard.
“You had the dilemma of these soldiers who really had to battle
on two fronts. They were fighting for their country in a foreign
land, and at the same time, in many parts of the United States,
they were still considered second-class citizens,” Lee said. “This
offers a really rich character study of Negro soldiers going
through that conflict. They want to fight for their country, but
they have to ask: Is this really worth it when I could go back to
Alabama and be lynched?”
Other big 2008 titles: Starship Dave, with Eddie Murphy
playing an entire space craft in a sci-fi comedy about a group of
tiny aliens seeking haven on Earth inside a vessel disguised as a
human; Wall-E, the latest from the animation masters at
Pixar (The Incredibles, Ratatouille), about a
robot left to tend the planet after humanity has left; Speed Racer,
starring Emile Hirsch in a live-action update of the TV cartoon
show, directed by Larry and Andy Wachowski, creators of The
Matrix flicks; The Incredible Hulk, with Edward
Norton the latest incarnation of the scientist with a really angry
alter ego; Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince,
featuring Daniel Radcliffe and pals in the second-to-last adventure
of the boy wizard; Leatherheads, a 1920s football comedy
directed by and starring George Clooney alongside Renee Zellweger
and John Krasinski; and The Spiderwick Chronicles, a
fantasy based on the children’s books about a mum (Mary-Louise
Parker) and her kids who move into the magical house owned by an
eccentric relation.
Parker was not into fantasy as a child, but Spiderwick
Chronicles allowed her to branch out into the family
genre.
“I did read Narnia, but I was more of a Little
House on the Prairie person. I’m not really a fan of things
flying around, but I always wanted to do a children’s movie, and
this seemed like sort of an atypical fantasy-type thing,” Parker
said. “The children, they weren’t archetypes. They were very unique
and they had some complexity to them. And the mother did, too. She
wasn’t just the perfect mother who was always struggling. She loses
her temper.”
Also coming this year: He’s Just Not That Into You, a
romantic comedy that casts Ben Affleck alongside two Jennifers -
Jennifer Aniston and Jennifer Connelly, along with Scarlett
Johansson and Drew Barrymore; Mamma Mia!, featuring Meryl
Streep, Pierce Brosnan and the songs of ABBA in an adaptation of
the stage musical; You Don’t Mess With the Zohan, a comedy
with Adam Sandler as an Israeli commando who fakes his death so he
can become a New York City hairdresser; Step Brothers,
with Will Ferrell and John C Reilly as middle-aged slackers who
suddenly become kin by marriage; Dr Seuss’ Horton Hears a
Who, an animated version of the children’s classic featuring
the voices of Jim Carrey and Steve Carell; Iron Man, with
Robert Downey Jr and Gwyneth Paltrow in a big-screen version of the
comic-book hero; and Madagascar: The Crate Escape, an
animated sequel reteaming the voice cast of Ben Stiller, Chris
Rock, David Schwimmer and Jada Pinkett Smith as zoo animals in the
wild.
Pinkett Smith’s husband, Will Smith, returns to the big
box-office date he has owned in the past, starring with Charlize
Theron in the Fourth of July release Hancock, the story of
an alcoholic superhero that he promises will range from crazy
comedy to sober drama to visual spectacle.
AP

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Related posts

Indy, Bond, Trek, Batman: Movies coming in 2008

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

Thanks to the long lead time for big-screen productions, the
2008 film schedule will go on largely uninterrupted despite the
writers strike.
With a solid range of prospects, the 2008 lineup offers plenty
of intriguing questions.
Can Harrison Ford’s Indiana Jones still throw a punch? Is Harry
Potter looking ahead to the senior prom now that he’s in his
next-to-last year at Hogwarts? Will Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto
live long and prosper as the Trek world’s new Kirk and Spock?
And just what have perpetually lovelorn writer Carrie Bradshaw
and her gal pals been up to since Sex and the City went
off the air in 2004?
Sarah Jessica Parker, who reprises the role in New Line Cinema’s
upcoming big-screen adaptation of Sex and the City, is not
at liberty to say.
“I was given a pill by New Line, and it erased my short-term
memory. They took away my script,” said Parker, who rejoins
castmates Kim Cattrall, Kristin Davis and Cynthia Nixon.
Coyness over plot points is an epidemic this time of year as
stars and filmmakers look ahead to their big releases. In the age
of internet spoilers, everyone wants to keep as much as they can
secret so fans don’t go into the theatre already quoting the
script.
Continuing the story of Bruce Wayne after Batman
Begins, director Christopher Nolan bluntly said “you’ll need
to see the movie” if you want to know what Christian Bale’s
tragedy-torn superhero is up to.
Nolan does offer an answer to the obvious question: Why doesn’t
the latest Batman movie have the word “Batman” in the title?
“In doing a continuation of the story, we didn’t want to give
the impression that it’s just going to be the standard-issue
sequel,” Nolan said of The Dark Knight, due out the US
this northern summer from Warner Bros. “We wanted this to be the
definitive take on who the Dark Knight is and what that represents
and what the meaning of that appellation is.”
The sequel does make good on the tease at the end of Batman
Begins, which set up Bale’s first encounter with his ultimate
nemesis. Heath Ledger plays the Joker, and Nolan promised an
utterly different take from Jack Nicholson’s in 1989’s
Batman.
“The corrupted clown face is built into the icon of the Joker,
but we gave a Francis Bacon spin to it. This corruption, this decay
in the texture of the look itself. It’s grubby. You can almost
imagine what he smells like,” Nolan said.
Fan imaginations have run wild over Paramount’s Indiana
Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, the first film
about Ford’s archaeologist-adventurer in 19 years.
Set in 1957, Crystal Skull pits Indy against the Soviets, whose
number includes Cate Blanchett, Ford confirmed. Beyond that, Ford’s
not leaking plot details, including whether new co-star Shia
LaBeouf is Indy’s son or whether Ford shares any romantic moments
with Blanchett.
“They remain true to their characters. There’s a certain tension
between the two, but not a sexual energy,” Ford said cryptically of
his and Blanchett’s characters.
Ford also kept quiet on how Indy reunites with Karen Allen’s
character.
“It’s great to have Karen back,” Ford said. “I can’t really tell
you much, though. It’s a little too early to be saying much more
than what’s already been said, and I don’t want to be the one to
unwrap the Christmas present.”
While it remains a mystery if Ford gets to play LaBeouf’s dad in
the new movie, Indy himself is not reunited with his own father.
Ford was disappointed that Sean Connery, who played Henry Jones Sr
in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, decided not to reprise the
role.
The 65-year-old Ford had a joke worthy of Indy about that: “As I
told Sean, I’m getting old enough to play my own father, so we
don’t need him, anymore.”
Along with Indy, Batman and Carrie, Hollywood offers plenty of
other familiar names this year.
TV’s favourite alien hunters, Mulder and Scully, return for 20th
Century Fox’s as-yet-untitled second X-Files movie, with
David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson reunited with series creator
Chris Carter, who’s directing.
C S Lewis’ sibling heroes are back in Disney’s The
Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian, with The Lion, the
Witch and the Wardrobe director Andrew Adamson running the
show again and Liam Neeson reprising the voice of talking lion
Aslan.
Daniel Craig has his second outing as 007 in Sony’s
still-untitled James Bond adventure, with Judi Dench returning as
spymaster M and Jeffrey Wright reprising his role as CIA colleague
Felix Leiter.
Agent Maxwell Smart, who started as a Bond spoof on 1960s TV,
comes to the big-screen in the Warner Bros action comedy Get
Smart, with Steve Carell in the title role, Dwayne Johnson as
a superstar operative and Anne Hathaway as Agent 99.
Minus Rachel Weisz, his co-star in the first two Mummy movies,
Brendan Fraser has another go at fighting a resurrected dead guy,
this time an ancient Chinese ruler (Jet Li), in The Mummy: Tomb
of the Dragon Emperor. Frasier also stars in Journey, a 3-D
take on Jules Verne’s sci-fi classic Journey to the Centre of
the Earth.
And Star Trek revisits its roots, with Pine taking over
William Shatner’s role as bold Enterprise Capt James Kirk and
Quinto stepping in as Leonard Nimoy’s Vulcan science officer Spock.
The Paramount film is directed by Lost creator J J
Abrams.
Along with such action and visual-effects spectacles come an
intriguing range of dramatic stories.
Brad Pitt reunites with Babel co-star Blanchett for
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, based on an F Scott
Fitzgerald story about a man who ages backward from old age toward
infancy.
Director Baz Luhrmann reteams with Moulin Rouge star
Nicole Kidman for Australia, co-starring Hugh Jackman in a
tale of a cattle drive down under amid a bombing by Japanese forces
during World War II.
In another World War II saga, Spike Lee directs Miracle at
St Anna, the story of four Americans (Derek Luke, Michael
Ealy, Laz Alonso and Omar Benson Miller) who are part of an
all-black division fighting in Italy at a time when segregation
remained the standard.
“You had the dilemma of these soldiers who really had to battle
on two fronts. They were fighting for their country in a foreign
land, and at the same time, in many parts of the United States,
they were still considered second-class citizens,” Lee said. “This
offers a really rich character study of Negro soldiers going
through that conflict. They want to fight for their country, but
they have to ask: Is this really worth it when I could go back to
Alabama and be lynched?”
Other big 2008 titles: Starship Dave, with Eddie Murphy
playing an entire space craft in a sci-fi comedy about a group of
tiny aliens seeking haven on Earth inside a vessel disguised as a
human; Wall-E, the latest from the animation masters at
Pixar (The Incredibles, Ratatouille), about a
robot left to tend the planet after humanity has left; Speed Racer,
starring Emile Hirsch in a live-action update of the TV cartoon
show, directed by Larry and Andy Wachowski, creators of The
Matrix flicks; The Incredible Hulk, with Edward
Norton the latest incarnation of the scientist with a really angry
alter ego; Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince,
featuring Daniel Radcliffe and pals in the second-to-last adventure
of the boy wizard; Leatherheads, a 1920s football comedy
directed by and starring George Clooney alongside Renee Zellweger
and John Krasinski; and The Spiderwick Chronicles, a
fantasy based on the children’s books about a mum (Mary-Louise
Parker) and her kids who move into the magical house owned by an
eccentric relation.
Parker was not into fantasy as a child, but Spiderwick
Chronicles allowed her to branch out into the family
genre.
“I did read Narnia, but I was more of a Little
House on the Prairie person. I’m not really a fan of things
flying around, but I always wanted to do a children’s movie, and
this seemed like sort of an atypical fantasy-type thing,” Parker
said. “The children, they weren’t archetypes. They were very unique
and they had some complexity to them. And the mother did, too. She
wasn’t just the perfect mother who was always struggling. She loses
her temper.”
Also coming this year: He’s Just Not That Into You, a
romantic comedy that casts Ben Affleck alongside two Jennifers -
Jennifer Aniston and Jennifer Connelly, along with Scarlett
Johansson and Drew Barrymore; Mamma Mia!, featuring Meryl
Streep, Pierce Brosnan and the songs of ABBA in an adaptation of
the stage musical; You Don’t Mess With the Zohan, a comedy
with Adam Sandler as an Israeli commando who fakes his death so he
can become a New York City hairdresser; Step Brothers,
with Will Ferrell and John C Reilly as middle-aged slackers who
suddenly become kin by marriage; Dr Seuss’ Horton Hears a
Who, an animated version of the children’s classic featuring
the voices of Jim Carrey and Steve Carell; Iron Man, with
Robert Downey Jr and Gwyneth Paltrow in a big-screen version of the
comic-book hero; and Madagascar: The Crate Escape, an
animated sequel reteaming the voice cast of Ben Stiller, Chris
Rock, David Schwimmer and Jada Pinkett Smith as zoo animals in the
wild.
Pinkett Smith’s husband, Will Smith, returns to the big
box-office date he has owned in the past, starring with Charlize
Theron in the Fourth of July release Hancock, the story of
an alcoholic superhero that he promises will range from crazy
comedy to sober drama to visual spectacle.
AP

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Related posts

Indy, Bond, Trek, Batman: Movies coming in 2008

Wednesday, January 23rd, 2008

Thanks to the long lead time for big-screen productions, the
2008 film schedule will go on largely uninterrupted despite the
writers strike.
With a solid range of prospects, the 2008 lineup offers plenty
of intriguing questions.
Can Harrison Ford’s Indiana Jones still throw a punch? Is Harry
Potter looking ahead to the senior prom now that he’s in his
next-to-last year at Hogwarts? Will Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto
live long and prosper as the Trek world’s new Kirk and Spock?
And just what have perpetually lovelorn writer Carrie Bradshaw
and her gal pals been up to since Sex and the City went
off the air in 2004?
Sarah Jessica Parker, who reprises the role in New Line Cinema’s
upcoming big-screen adaptation of Sex and the City, is not
at liberty to say.
“I was given a pill by New Line, and it erased my short-term
memory. They took away my script,” said Parker, who rejoins
castmates Kim Cattrall, Kristin Davis and Cynthia Nixon.
Coyness over plot points is an epidemic this time of year as
stars and filmmakers look ahead to their big releases. In the age
of internet spoilers, everyone wants to keep as much as they can
secret so fans don’t go into the theatre already quoting the
script.
Continuing the story of Bruce Wayne after Batman
Begins, director Christopher Nolan bluntly said “you’ll need
to see the movie” if you want to know what Christian Bale’s
tragedy-torn superhero is up to.
Nolan does offer an answer to the obvious question: Why doesn’t
the latest Batman movie have the word “Batman” in the title?
“In doing a continuation of the story, we didn’t want to give
the impression that it’s just going to be the standard-issue
sequel,” Nolan said of The Dark Knight, due out the US
this northern summer from Warner Bros. “We wanted this to be the
definitive take on who the Dark Knight is and what that represents
and what the meaning of that appellation is.”
The sequel does make good on the tease at the end of Batman
Begins, which set up Bale’s first encounter with his ultimate
nemesis. Heath Ledger plays the Joker, and Nolan promised an
utterly different take from Jack Nicholson’s in 1989’s
Batman.
“The corrupted clown face is built into the icon of the Joker,
but we gave a Francis Bacon spin to it. This corruption, this decay
in the texture of the look itself. It’s grubby. You can almost
imagine what he smells like,” Nolan said.
Fan imaginations have run wild over Paramount’s Indiana
Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, the first film
about Ford’s archaeologist-adventurer in 19 years.
Set in 1957, Crystal Skull pits Indy against the Soviets, whose
number includes Cate Blanchett, Ford confirmed. Beyond that, Ford’s
not leaking plot details, including whether new co-star Shia
LaBeouf is Indy’s son or whether Ford shares any romantic moments
with Blanchett.
“They remain true to their characters. There’s a certain tension
between the two, but not a sexual energy,” Ford said cryptically of
his and Blanchett’s characters.
Ford also kept quiet on how Indy reunites with Karen Allen’s
character.
“It’s great to have Karen back,” Ford said. “I can’t really tell
you much, though. It’s a little too early to be saying much more
than what’s already been said, and I don’t want to be the one to
unwrap the Christmas present.”
While it remains a mystery if Ford gets to play LaBeouf’s dad in
the new movie, Indy himself is not reunited with his own father.
Ford was disappointed that Sean Connery, who played Henry Jones Sr
in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, decided not to reprise the
role.
The 65-year-old Ford had a joke worthy of Indy about that: “As I
told Sean, I’m getting old enough to play my own father, so we
don’t need him, anymore.”
Along with Indy, Batman and Carrie, Hollywood offers plenty of
other familiar names this year.
TV’s favourite alien hunters, Mulder and Scully, return for 20th
Century Fox’s as-yet-untitled second X-Files movie, with
David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson reunited with series creator
Chris Carter, who’s directing.
C S Lewis’ sibling heroes are back in Disney’s The
Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian, with The Lion, the
Witch and the Wardrobe director Andrew Adamson running the
show again and Liam Neeson reprising the voice of talking lion
Aslan.
Daniel Craig has his second outing as 007 in Sony’s
still-untitled James Bond adventure, with Judi Dench returning as
spymaster M and Jeffrey Wright reprising his role as CIA colleague
Felix Leiter.
Agent Maxwell Smart, who started as a Bond spoof on 1960s TV,
comes to the big-screen in the Warner Bros action comedy Get
Smart, with Steve Carell in the title role, Dwayne Johnson as
a superstar operative and Anne Hathaway as Agent 99.
Minus Rachel Weisz, his co-star in the first two Mummy movies,
Brendan Fraser has another go at fighting a resurrected dead guy,
this time an ancient Chinese ruler (Jet Li), in The Mummy: Tomb
of the Dragon Emperor. Frasier also stars in Journey, a 3-D
take on Jules Verne’s sci-fi classic Journey to the Centre of
the Earth.
And Star Trek revisits its roots, with Pine taking over
William Shatner’s role as bold Enterprise Capt James Kirk and
Quinto stepping in as Leonard Nimoy’s Vulcan science officer Spock.
The Paramount film is directed by Lost creator J J
Abrams.
Along with such action and visual-effects spectacles come an
intriguing range of dramatic stories.
Brad Pitt reunites with Babel co-star Blanchett for
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, based on an F Scott
Fitzgerald story about a man who ages backward from old age toward
infancy.
Director Baz Luhrmann reteams with Moulin Rouge star
Nicole Kidman for Australia, co-starring Hugh Jackman in a
tale of a cattle drive down under amid a bombing by Japanese forces
during World War II.
In another World War II saga, Spike Lee directs Miracle at
St Anna, the story of four Americans (Derek Luke, Michael
Ealy, Laz Alonso and Omar Benson Miller) who are part of an
all-black division fighting in Italy at a time when segregation
remained the standard.
“You had the dilemma of these soldiers who really had to battle
on two fronts. They were fighting for their country in a foreign
land, and at the same time, in many parts of the United States,
they were still considered second-class citizens,” Lee said. “This
offers a really rich character study of Negro soldiers going
through that conflict. They want to fight for their country, but
they have to ask: Is this really worth it when I could go back to
Alabama and be lynched?”
Other big 2008 titles: Starship Dave, with Eddie Murphy
playing an entire space craft in a sci-fi comedy about a group of
tiny aliens seeking haven on Earth inside a vessel disguised as a
human; Wall-E, the latest from the animation masters at
Pixar (The Incredibles, Ratatouille), about a
robot left to tend the planet after humanity has left; Speed Racer,
starring Emile Hirsch in a live-action update of the TV cartoon
show, directed by Larry and Andy Wachowski, creators of The
Matrix flicks; The Incredible Hulk, with Edward
Norton the latest incarnation of the scientist with a really angry
alter ego; Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince,
featuring Daniel Radcliffe and pals in the second-to-last adventure
of the boy wizard; Leatherheads, a 1920s football comedy
directed by and starring George Clooney alongside Renee Zellweger
and John Krasinski; and The Spiderwick Chronicles, a
fantasy based on the children’s books about a mum (Mary-Louise
Parker) and her kids who move into the magical house owned by an
eccentric relation.
Parker was not into fantasy as a child, but Spiderwick
Chronicles allowed her to branch out into the family
genre.
“I did read Narnia, but I was more of a Little
House on the Prairie person. I’m not really a fan of things
flying around, but I always wanted to do a children’s movie, and
this seemed like sort of an atypical fantasy-type thing,” Parker
said. “The children, they weren’t archetypes. They were very unique
and they had some complexity to them. And the mother did, too. She
wasn’t just the perfect mother who was always struggling. She loses
her temper.”
Also coming this year: He’s Just Not That Into You, a
romantic comedy that casts Ben Affleck alongside two Jennifers -
Jennifer Aniston and Jennifer Connelly, along with Scarlett
Johansson and Drew Barrymore; Mamma Mia!, featuring Meryl
Streep, Pierce Brosnan and the songs of ABBA in an adaptation of
the stage musical; You Don’t Mess With the Zohan, a comedy
with Adam Sandler as an Israeli commando who fakes his death so he
can become a New York City hairdresser; Step Brothers,
with Will Ferrell and John C Reilly as middle-aged slackers who
suddenly become kin by marriage; Dr Seuss’ Horton Hears a
Who, an animated version of the children’s classic featuring
the voices of Jim Carrey and Steve Carell; Iron Man, with
Robert Downey Jr and Gwyneth Paltrow in a big-screen version of the
comic-book hero; and Madagascar: The Crate Escape, an
animated sequel reteaming the voice cast of Ben Stiller, Chris
Rock, David Schwimmer and Jada Pinkett Smith as zoo animals in the
wild.
Pinkett Smith’s husband, Will Smith, returns to the big
box-office date he has owned in the past, starring with Charlize
Theron in the Fourth of July release Hancock, the story of
an alcoholic superhero that he promises will range from crazy
comedy to sober drama to visual spectacle.
AP

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